Loroi Trade Grammar

The aim of grammar in formal Trade is to be as simple and clear as possible. Many Trade words are polysyllabic, and sentence structure is very formal, but it
was not originally meant to be a conversational language. The
Neridi and Barsam have developed a more conversational dialect
for their own use, which the Loroi have partially picked up on. There are also
some archaic Loroi abstractions in the mix.
It is common for non-native speakers to use very simple forms of the grammar, without many of the particles or conjugations. Of course, they sound a bit primitive when doing so, but the meaning is often quite clear.

Here this subject is tezair ("I") with the optional subject marker
mé; the object “town” is nazalat, marked by the preposition
monnen (“to”), and modified by the adjective nelain (“near”); and the verb is
baze, “to go,” modified by the adverb terei, "quickly."

Subject- and Object-Marking Particles

These particles are usually optional (used for clarity) and follow the subject or object they mark.
Subject marker: mé (sometimes optional). Occasionally the subject itself is omitted, particularly if it is the pronoun
tezair (“I/me”).

Tezair mé baze.
Tezair baze.
Baze.
“I go.”

Object marker: tó
Normally, the object directly precedes the verb. Only used for clarity, in unusual situations were the words are out of order, the subject is missing, or when an ambiguous verb modifier is in the usual object place. For an indirect-object marker, use a preposition instead.